Abstract

James Philip Elliott made important contributions to improve our understanding of the structure of atomic nuclei in the second half of the twentieth century. In 1958 he proposed the SU(3) model, explaining rotational behaviour of nuclei in the context of the shell model. His idea, based on elegant and seminal group-theoretical concepts, reconciled the independent-particle with the liquid-drop model, which until then existed as disconnected views of the nucleus. In the 1960s and 1970s he developed methods to extract properties of the nuclear interaction from the phase shifts of nucleon–nucleon scattering. From 1980 until his death he contributed to the development of the interacting boson model of Arima and Iachello, and its microscopic understanding in terms of symmetries of the shell model. For his outstanding achievements in theoretical physics, in 2002 he and Francesco Iachello were awarded the Lise Meitner prize of the European Physical Society for ‘their innovative applications of group-theoretical methods to the understanding of atomic nuclei’. His achievements were also recognized by the award of the Rutherford Medal and Prize of the Institute of Physics in 1994.

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